Methods and compositions for preparing and purifying noribogaine

Mash , et al. July 19, 2

Patent Grant 9394294

U.S. patent number 9,394,294 [Application Number 14/298,534] was granted by the patent office on 2016-07-19 for methods and compositions for preparing and purifying noribogaine. This patent grant is currently assigned to DEMERX, INC.. The grantee listed for this patent is DemeRx, Inc.. Invention is credited to Richard D. Gless, Jr., Deborah C. Mash.


United States Patent 9,394,294
Mash ,   et al. July 19, 2016

Methods and compositions for preparing and purifying noribogaine

Abstract

Disclosed are methods and compositions for purifying the non-addictive alkaloid noribogaine.


Inventors: Mash; Deborah C. (Miami, FL), Gless, Jr.; Richard D. (Miami, FL)
Applicant:
Name City State Country Type

DemeRx, Inc.

Fort Lauderdale

FL

US
Assignee: DEMERX, INC. (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
Family ID: 51985829
Appl. No.: 14/298,534
Filed: June 6, 2014

Prior Publication Data

Document Identifier Publication Date
US 20140357741 A1 Dec 4, 2014

Related U.S. Patent Documents

Application Number Filing Date Patent Number Issue Date
13104406 May 10, 2011 8765737
61333476 May 11, 2010
61419772 Dec 3, 2010

Current U.S. Class: 1/1
Current CPC Class: B01D 15/363 (20130101); B01J 41/20 (20130101); C07D 453/00 (20130101); C07D 471/22 (20130101); B01D 15/3833 (20130101)
Current International Class: B01J 41/20 (20060101); B01D 15/36 (20060101); C07D 471/22 (20060101); C07D 453/00 (20060101); A61K 31/55 (20060101); B01D 15/38 (20060101)
Field of Search: ;521/214.02,30 ;540/579

References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents
2813873 November 1957 Janot, et al.
2877229 March 1959 Taylor
3516989 June 1970 Sallay
3557126 January 1971 Sallay
3574220 April 1971 Sallay
3639408 February 1972 Nagata et al.
3715361 February 1973 Epstein et al.
3716528 February 1973 Nagata et al.
3875011 April 1975 Rubenstein et al.
4107288 August 1978 Oppenheim et al.
4272541 June 1981 Kotick et al.
4375414 March 1983 Strahilevitz
4422955 December 1983 Bryant
4444758 April 1984 Scherschlicht et al.
4462941 July 1984 Lee et al.
4464378 August 1984 Hussain
4499096 February 1985 Lotsof
4573995 March 1986 Chen et al.
4587243 May 1986 Lotsof
4604365 August 1986 O'Neill et al.
4620977 November 1986 Strahilevitz
4626539 December 1986 Aungst et al.
4661492 April 1987 Lewis et al.
4668232 May 1987 Cordes et al.
4737586 April 1988 Potier et al.
4806341 February 1989 Chien et al.
4857523 August 1989 Lotsof
5026697 June 1991 Lotsof
5075341 December 1991 Mendelson et al.
5145684 September 1992 Liversidge et al.
5149538 September 1992 Granger et al.
5152994 October 1992 Lotsof
5283247 February 1994 Dwivedi et al.
5290784 March 1994 Qu et al.
5316759 May 1994 Rose et al.
5382657 January 1995 Karasiewicz et al.
5426112 June 1995 Zagon et al.
5552406 September 1996 Mendelson et al.
5574052 November 1996 Rose et al.
5578645 November 1996 Askanazi et al.
5580876 December 1996 Crain et al.
5591738 January 1997 Lotsof
5616575 April 1997 Efange et al.
5618555 April 1997 Tokuda et al.
5703101 December 1997 Rose et al.
5726190 March 1998 Rose et al.
5760044 June 1998 Archer
5861422 January 1999 Rose et al.
5865444 February 1999 Kempf et al.
5925634 July 1999 Olney
5935975 August 1999 Rose et al.
6211360 April 2001 Glick et al.
6291675 September 2001 Coop et al.
6348456 February 2002 Mash
6451806 September 2002 Farrar
6806291 October 2004 Sunkel et al.
6864271 March 2005 Bazan et al.
7220737 May 2007 Mash
7737169 June 2010 Corrie
7745479 June 2010 Nettekoven
8017151 September 2011 Batrakova et al.
8178524 May 2012 Mash
8362007 January 2013 Mash
8637648 January 2014 Mash et al.
8741891 June 2014 Mash
8765737 July 2014 Mash
8802832 August 2014 Mash et al.
2003/0153552 August 2003 Mash et al.
2003/0158202 August 2003 Caldirola et al.
2006/0051317 March 2006 Batrakova et al.
2007/0185085 August 2007 Mash
2010/0311722 December 2010 Mash
2010/0311723 December 2010 Mash
2010/0311724 December 2010 Mash
2010/0311725 December 2010 Mash
2012/0083485 April 2012 Mash
2012/0253037 October 2012 Moriarty et al.
2013/0072472 March 2013 Gless, Jr.
2013/0131046 May 2013 Moriarty et al.
2013/0165647 June 2013 Moriarty et al.
2013/0303756 November 2013 Mash et al.
2014/0187655 July 2014 Mash et al.
2014/0315837 October 2014 Mash et al.
2014/0315891 October 2014 Mash
2014/0357741 December 2014 Mash et al.
Foreign Patent Documents
2039197 Sep 1995 CA
22 17 132 Oct 1972 DE
2 338 494 Jun 2011 EP
0 841 697 Jul 1960 GB
0 924 042 Apr 1962 GB
1 256 914 Dec 1971 GB
1 378 348 Dec 1974 GB
2 271 059 Apr 1994 GB
04-221315 Aug 1992 JP
WO-91/18609 Dec 1991 WO
WO-93/20825 Oct 1993 WO
WO-93/25217 Dec 1993 WO
WO-94/06426 Mar 1994 WO
WO-94/14490 Jul 1994 WO
WO-96/01327 Jan 1996 WO
WO-96/03127 Feb 1996 WO
WO-99/11250 Mar 1999 WO
WO-2007/012464 Feb 2007 WO
WO-2007/070892 Jun 2007 WO
WO-2012/012764 Jan 2012 WO
WO-2013/065850 May 2013 WO
WO-2013/085850 Jun 2013 WO
WO-2013/085922 Jun 2013 WO
WO-2013/148572 Oct 2013 WO

Other References

"Analysis--HPLC--Interchim technology", Interchim.com, pp. B31-B93. cited by applicant .
Ala-Hurula, et al. "Erogotamine Abuse: Results of Ergotamine Discontinuation, with Special Reference to the Plasma Concentrations," Cephalalgia, 2:4 1982, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Ala-Hurula, et al. "Tolfenamic Acid and Ergotamine Abuse," Headache, 21:6, 1981, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Alexander. "A Procedure for Drug Screening Without the Need to Transport Urines Use of Ion Exchange Papers and Hem Agglutination Inhibition," Clinical Toxicology, 9:3, 1976, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Alim, et al. "Open-Label, Dose Run-Up Study of Diethylpropion in Initial Cocaine Abstinence," Clinical Neuropharmacology, 17:2, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Almeida. "Use and Abuse of Alcohol and Drugs a Clinical Study of Certain Aspects of Their Interrelationship," Boletin de la Oficina Sanitaria Panamericana, 88:1, 1980, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Al-Shabanah, et al. "Gastric Antiulcer and Cytoprotective Effects of Cathinone, a Psychoactive Alkaloid of Khat (Catha Edulis Forsk.) and Amphetamine in Rats," Regulatory Peptides, abstract only, 1994. cited by applicant .
Azevedo, et al. "Adrenergic Nerve Degeneration Induced by Condensation Products of Adrenaline and Acetaldehyde," Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, 300:2, 1977, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Bagal, et al. "Modulation of Morphine-Induced Antinociception by Ibogaine and Noribogaine," Brain Research, 741:1-2, 1996, pp. 258-262. cited by applicant .
Bartlett, et al. "The Alkaloids of Tabernanthe iboga. Part IV. The Structures of Ibogamine, Ibogaine, Tabernanthine and Voacangine." Journal of the American Chemical Society, 80, 1958, pp. 126-136. cited by applicant .
Batrakova. "Pluronic P85 Enhances the Delivery of Digoxin to the Brain: In Vitro and In Vivo Studies", The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy, 296, 2001, pp. 551-557. cited by applicant .
Baumann et al. "Comparative Neurobiology of Ibogaine and its Metabolite, 12-Hydroxyibogaimine (Noribogaine), in Rodents." Conference at New York University, Abstract only. cited by applicant .
Beaubrun. "The Diagnosis and Management of Acute Psychotic Reaction Due to Alcohol and Drugs", Caribbean Medical Journal, 36:1, 1975, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Beck, et al. "Energy-Dependent Reduced Drug Binding as a Mechanism of Vinca Alkaloid Resistance in Human Leukemic Lymphoblasts", Molecular Pharmacology, 24:3, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Benet et al. "Pharmacokinetics: Biotransformation of Drugs." In Gilman et al. Goodman and Gilman's the Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics (1990) :13-16. cited by applicant .
Benoist, et al. "Comparative Effects of Fagaronine Adriamycin and Aclacinomycin on K562 Cell Sensitivity to Natural-Killer-Mediated Lysis Lack of Agreement Between Alteration of Transferrin Receptor and CD15 Antigen Expressions and Induction of Resistance to Natural Killer", Cancer Immunology Immunotherapy , 30:5, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Bert, et al. "Non-Amphetaminic Central Stimulation by Alkaloids from the Ibogaine and Vobasine Series", Planta Medicina, 54:3, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Bhargava, et al. "Effects of ibogaine and noribogaine on the antinociceptive action of mu-, delta- and kappa-opioid receptor agonists in mice", Brain Research 752, 1997, pp. 234-238. cited by applicant .
Blum, et al. "Peyote a Potential Ethnopharmacologic Agent for Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependencies Possible Biochemical Rationale", Clinical Toxicology, 11:4, 1977, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Blum, et al. "Possible Role of Tetrahydroisoquinoline Alkaloids in Postalcohol Intoxication States", Annals of the New York Academy of Science, 273, 1976, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Blum, et al. "Putative Role of Isoquinoline Alkaloids in Alcoholism: A Link to Opiates", Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 2:2, 1978, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Brady, et al. "Analgesic Effects of Intraventricular Morphine and Enkephalins in Nondependent and Morphine-Dependent Rats," Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapy, 222:1, 1982, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Buchi, et al. "The total synthesis of iboga alkaloids," Jounal of the American Chemical Society, 88, 1966, pp. 3099-3109. cited by applicant .
Bundgaard. "Design of Prodrugs: Bioreversible Derivatives for Various Functional Groups and Chemical Entities." Design of Prodrugs, 1-10, 1985. cited by applicant .
Bussel, et al. "Isolated Thrombocytopenia in Patients Infected with HIV Treatment with Intravenous Gamma Globulin," American Journal of Hematology, 28:2, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Caldwell, et al. "The Biochemical Pharmacology of Abused Drugs. III. Cannabis, Opiates, and Synthetic Narcotics," Clinical Pharmacological Therapy, 16:6, 1974, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Cankat. "Pharmacological Aspects of Drug Induced Headache", Functional Neurology, 7:6, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Cappendijk, et al. "The Inhibitory Effect of Norharman on Morphine Withdrawal Syndrome in Rats: Comparison with Ibogaine." Behavioural Brain Research, 65, 1994, pp. 117-119. cited by applicant .
Cappendijk, et al. "Inhibitory Effects of Ibogaine on Cocaine Self-Administration in Rats", European Journal of Pharmacology, 241:2-3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Castle. "Drugs and Fibrotic Reactions--Part I", Adverse Drug React. Bull., 113: abstract only, 1985. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 16671-16-2 Registry, 1967. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 3464-63-9 Registry, 1965. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 481-87-8 Registry, 1952. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 4865-78-5 Registry, 1965. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 53508-36-4 Registry, 1974. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 57511-56-5 Registry, 1975. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 77123-15-0 Registry, 1980. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 83-74-9 Registry, 1934. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 88660-07-5 Registry, 1983. cited by applicant .
Chemical abstract, RN 88660-09-7 Registry, 1983. cited by applicant .
Cherny, et al., Opioid responsiveness of cancer pain syndromes caused by neuropathic or nociceptive mechanisms: a combined analysis of controlled, single-dose studies, Neurobiology 44, 1994, pp. 857-861. cited by applicant .
Cheze, et al. "Determination of ibogaine and noribogaine in biological fluids and hair by LC-MS/MS after Tabernanthe iboga abuse", Forensic Science International, Elsevierscientific Publishers Ireland Ltd, IE, vol. 176, No. 1, Nov. 19, 2007, pp. 58-66. cited by applicant .
Criel, et al. "Drug Dependent Red Cell Antibodies and Intravascular Haemolysis Occurring in Patients Treated with 9 Hydroxy-Methyl-Ellipticinium," British Journal of Haematology, 46:4, 1980, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Damstrup, et al. "Retroperitoneal Fibrosis After Long-Term Daily Use of Ergotamine," International Urology and Nephrology, 18:3, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Database Registry (Online), Chemical Abstracts Service, Columbus Ohis, US Nov. 16, 1984, "ibogamine-18-carboxylic acid, 12-methoxy-,potassium sal," XP002638006, Database accession No. 5500-12-9. cited by applicant .
Database Registry Chemical Abstracts Service, Columbus, Ohio, US; 1984, "Ibogamine-18-carboxylic acid, 12-methoxy-, potassium sal", Database accession No. 5500-12-9. cited by applicant .
Deecher, et al. "Mechanisms of Action of Ibogaine and Harmaline Congeners Based on Radioligand Binding Studies." Brain Research 571, 1992, pp. 242-247. cited by applicant .
Diener, et al. "Analgesic-Induced Chronic Headache Long-Term Results of Withdrawal Therapy," Journal of Neurology, 236:1, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Dierckx, et al. "Intraarterial Sodium Nitroprusside Infusion in the Treatment of Severe Ergotism," Clinical Neuropharmacology, 9:6, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Dzoljic, et al. "Effect of Ibogaine on Naloxone-Precipitated Withdrawal Syndrome in Chronic Morphine-Dependent Rats," Archives Internationales de Pharmacodynamie et de Therapie, 294, 1988, pp. 64-70. cited by applicant .
Eberwine, et al. "Molecular Analysis of Cellular Responses to Opiate Use", Fidia Research Foundation Symposium Series 7 (Neurotransmitter Regulation of Gene Transcription) 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Elkind. "Drug Abuse and Headache", Medical Clinics of North America, 75:3, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Evenson. "Developments in Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and Alkaloid Analysis", Federation Proceedings, 34:12, 1975, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Extended European Search Report dated Jun. 6, 2011 in related European Patent Appl. No. 11159572.4. cited by applicant .
Faglia, et al. "Dihydroergocryptine in Management of Microprolactinomas," Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 65:4, 1987, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Fairchild, et al. "Keynote Address: Multidrug Resistance: A Pleiotropic Response to Cytotoxic Drugs," International Journal of Radiation, Oncology, Biology, & Physics, 20:2, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Finkle. "Phencyclidine Identification by Thin-Layer Chromatography. A Rapid Screening Procedure for Emergency Toxicology", American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 70:2, 1978, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Fonne-Pfister, et al. "Xenobiotic and Endobiotic Inhibitors of Cytochrome P-450db1 Function, the Target of the Debrisoquine / Sparteine Type Polymorphism," Biochemical Pharmacology, 37:20, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Frances, et al. "Effects of Ibogaine on Naloxone-Precipitated Withdrawal in Morphine-Dependent Mice", Fundamental Clininical Pharmacology, 6:8-9, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Gabr, et al. "Changes in Absolute Amount of Alkaloids in Datura-Metel Treated with Certain Growth Regulators", Herba Pol, 21:2, 1975, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Garcia, et al. Chronic pain states: pathophysiology and medical therapy, Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, 27, 1997, pp. 1-16. cited by applicant .
Gennaro. "Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy", Mack Publishing Col., vol. II, 1995, pp. 1736 & 1814. cited by applicant .
George, et al. "Palliative medicine", Postgraduate Medical Journal, vol. 69, 1993, pp. 426-449. cited by applicant .
Gifford, A. N. and Johnson, K. Gifford, et al. "Effect of Chronic Cocaine Treatment on D SUB 2 Receptors Regulating the Release of Dopamine and Acetylcholine in the Nucleus Accumbens and Striatum", Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 41:4, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Glick, et al. "Effects of iboga Alkaloids on Morphine and Cocaine Self-Administration in Rats: Relationship to Tremorigenic Effects and to Effects on Dopamine Release in Nucleus Accumbens and Striatum." Brain Research, 657, 1994, pp. 14-22. cited by applicant .
Glick, et al. "Effect of Ibogaine on Acute Signs of Morphine Withdrawal in Rats: Independence from Tremor", Neuropharmacology, 31:5, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Glick, et al. "Effects of Aftereffects of Ibogaine on Morphine Self-Administration in Rats", European Journal of Pharmacology, 195:3, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Glick, et al. "Ibogaine-like effects of noribogaine in rats", Brain Research, 713, 1996, pp. 294-297. cited by applicant .
Glick, et al. "Local Effects of Ibogaine on Extracellular Levels of Dopamine and Its Metabolites in Nucleus Accumbens and Striatum: Interactions with D-Amphetamine", Brain Research, 628:1-2, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Gold, et al. "Effect of Methadone Dosage on Clonidine Detoxification Efficacy", American Journal Psychiatry, 137:3, 1980, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Gothoni. "Harmine-, Lon-954- and 5-Hydroxytryptophan-Induced Tremors in Rats Withdrawn from Ethanol", Acta Pharmacologica et Toxicologica, Copenhagen, DK, 57:1, 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Greenwald, et al., "Poly(ethylene glycol) conjugated drugs and prodrugs: a comprehensive review," Crit. Rev. Ther. Drug Carrier Syst., (2000), 17(2):101-161. cited by applicant .
Gross. "Effect of Ergot Alkaloids on Serum Prolactin in Non-Psychotic Organic Brain Syndrome of the Elderly", Experimental Aging Research, 5:4, 1979, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Gunn. "Relations Between Chemical Constitution, Pharmacological Actions, and Therapeutic Uses, in the Harmine Group of Alkaloids." From the Pharmacological Laboratory, University of Oxford, 1935, pp. 379-396. cited by applicant .
Haber, et al. "Tetrahydroisoquinolines--Endogenous Products After Chronic Alcohol Abuse", Pharmazie, 47:1, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Halikas, et al. "Treatment of Crack Cocaine Use with Carbamazepine", American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 18:1, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Hanks. "Opioid-responsive and opioid-non-responsive pain in cancer," British Medical Bulletin 47, 1991, pp. 718-731. cited by applicant .
Hardman, et al. "Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics" (9th ed, 1996) p. 51 and pp. 57-58. cited by applicant .
Harsing, et al. "Evidence that Ibogaine Releases Dopamine from the Cytoplasmic Pool in Isloated Mouse Striatum", Journal of Neural Transmission General Section, 96:3, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Hearn, et al. "Identification and Quantitation of Ibogaine and an o-Demethylated Metabolite in Brain and Biological Fluids Using Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry." Journal Analytical Toxicology, 19, 1995, pp. 427-434. cited by applicant .
Heel, et al. "Buprenorphine: A Review of Its Pharmacological Properties and Therapeutic Efficacy", Drugs, 17:2, 1979, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Henry, et al. "Reversible Cerebral Arteriopathy Associated with the Administration of Ergot Derivatives", Cephalalgia, 4:3, 1984, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Ho, et al. "Metabolism of Harmaline in Rats." Biochemical Pharmacology vol. 20, 1971, pp. 1313-1319. cited by applicant .
Hoes. "Clinical Criteria for the Selection of Anxiolytics", Tijdschrift voor Therapie Geneesmiddel en Onderzoek, 9:9, 1984, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Holzner, et al. "The Neuroleptic Sleeping Course in Chronic Headache", Therapiewoche, 35/36: 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Huang, et al. "Cytotoxicity and Sister Chromatid Exchanges Induced in Vitro by Six Anticancer Drugs Developed in the People's Republic of China", Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 71:4, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Hubens, et al. "Chronic Intake of a Hydrogenated Ergot Alkaloid Causing Peripheral Vascular Ischemia--A Case Report", Journal of Vascular Surgery, 21:4, 1987, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Huffman et al., "A Formal Synthesis of (.+-.)-Ibogamine," J. Org. Chem., (1985), 50:1460-1464. cited by applicant .
Huffman, et al. "A Formal Synthesis of (.+-.)-Ibogamine," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 50, 1985, pp. 1460-1464. cited by applicant .
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/US2012/067799, dated Jun. 19, 2014. cited by applicant .
International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Mar. 11, 2013 in related PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US12/71052. cited by applicant .
International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Oct. 4, 2012 in related PCT Application Serial No. PCT/US2012/022255. cited by applicant .
International Search Report for PCT/US2011/045081 dated Oct. 4, 2011. cited by applicant .
Isler. "Treatment of Headache", Schweizerische Medizinische Wochenschrift, 114:35, 1984, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Jaffe. "Drug Addiction and Drug Abuse", in Gilman, et al., "Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics," New York, Pergamon Press, 1990, pp. 520-523 & pp. 559-568. cited by applicant .
Jaffe. "Psychopharmacology and Opiate Dependence," U.S. Public Health Services Publication, 1957-1967: pp. 1836. cited by applicant .
James. "Linkers for solid phase organic synthesis," Tetrahedron, 55, 1999, pp. 4855-4946. cited by applicant .
Jane, et al. "High-Performance Liquid Chromatographic Analysis of Basic Drugs on Silica Columns Using Non-Aqueous Ionic Eluents. II. Application of UV, Fluorescence and Electrochemical Oxidation detection", Journal of Chromatography, 323:2, 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Jansen, et al. "Ethnopharmacology of Kratom and the Mitragyna Alkaloids", Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 23:1, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Janzen. "History of Use of Psychotropic Drugs in Central Africa," Psychotropes, 1/2: 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Justins. "Management strategies for chronic pain," Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, vol. 55, 1996, pp. 588-596. cited by applicant .
Kalix. "Khat: A Plant with Amphetamine Effects," Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 5:3, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Kalix. "Pharmacological Properties of the Stimulant Khat", Pharmacological Therapy, 48:3, 1990, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Keefner. "A Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GCMS) Method for Ibogaine", Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, 19:1-3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Keller, et al. "Modulation of Neopterin Release by Human Kupffer Cells in Culture: Possible Implication in Clinical Monitoring of HIV-Seropositive Subjects", Cells Hepatic Sinusoid, 3: 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Knoll. "Azidomorphines and Homopyrimidazols: A New Approach to the Ideal Analgetic," ACTA Physiologica et Pharmacologica Bulgarica, 3:2, 1977, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Knoll. "Azidomorphines: A New Family of Potent Analgesics with Low Dependence Capacity," Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, 3:1-3, 1979, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Koch, et al. "Drug-Induced Liver Injury in Liver Biopsies of the Years 1981 and 1983, their Prevalence and Type of Presentation", Pathology, Research and Practice, 179: 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Konig. "Psychiatric Intensive Therapy After Acute Alkaloid Withdrawal Syndrome", Infusionsther Klin Ernahr, 6:1, 1979, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Kornetsky. "Pharmacology Drugs Affecting Behavior." John Wiley & Sons, 1976, pp. 185-187. cited by applicant .
Kostowski, et al. "The Effects of Some Hallucinogens on Aggressiveness of Mice and Rats" Pharmacology, 7, 1972, pp. 259-263. cited by applicant .
Krug. "Cocaine Abuse: Historical, Epidemiologic, and Clinical Perspectives for Pediatricians", Advances in Pediatrics, 36:369-406, 1989. cited by applicant .
Kupers, et al. "Morphine differentially affects the sensory and affective pain ratings in neuorgenic and idiopathic forms of pain." Pain, 47, 1991, pp. 5-12. cited by applicant .
Lakoski, et al. "Electrophysiologic Characterization of an Ibogaine Metabolite in Dorsal Raphe Nucleus and Hippocampus." Society for Neuroscience, 21:716, 1995, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Larson-Prior, et al. "Electrophysiologic Characterization of an Ibogaine Metabolite in the Cerebellar Cortex." Society for Neuroscience, 21:716, 1995, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Layer, et al., "Structurally modified ibogaine analogs exhibit differing affinities for NMDA receptors," European Journal of Pharmacology, 1996, 309:159-165. cited by applicant .
Lemontt, et al. "Increase MDR Gene Expression and Decreased Drug Accumulation in Multidrug-Resistant Human Melanoma Cells", Cancer Research, 48:22, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Leoni, et al. "Effect of Cocaine and Morphine on Neutral Endopeptidase Activity of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells Cultures with Lectins," Cell Biochemistry and Function, 11:3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Lerida, et al. "Incidence of Morphine Withdrawal and Quasi-Abstinence Syndrome in a Model of Chronic Pain in the Rat," Neuroscience, 81:1-2, 1987, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Lewis, et al. "Adverse Reactions and Interactions with .beta.-Adrenoceptor Blocking Drugs," Journal of Medical Toxicology, 1:5, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Lewis, et al. "Narcotic Analgesics and Antagonists," Annual Review of Pharmacology, 11, 1971, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Licht, et al. "Induction of Multiple-Drug Resistance During Anti-Neoplastic Chemotherapy In-Vitro," International Journal of Cancer, 49:4, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Ling, et al. "Drugs of Abuse-Opiates", in Addtiction Medicine [Special Issue], Western Journal of Medicine, 152, 1990, pp. 565-572. cited by applicant .
Low, et al. "Effects of Acronycine and Cytouchalasin B on the Division of Rat Leukemia Cells," Experimental Cell Research, 131:1, 1981, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Ma, et al. "Inhibition of Respiratory Burst Activity in Alveolar Macrophages by Bisbenzylisoquinoline Alkaloids: Characterization of Drug-Cell Interaction", Experimental Lung Research, 18:6, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Maisonneuve, et al. "Interactions of Ibogaine and D-Amphetamine: in vivio Microdialysis and Motor Behavior in Rats." Brain Research 579, 1992, pp. 87-92. cited by applicant .
Maisonneuve, et al. "Acute and Prolonged Effects of Ibogaine on Brain Dopamine Metabolism and Morphine-Induced Locomotor Activity in Rats", Brain Research, 575:1, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Maisonneuve, et al. "Interactions Between Ibogaine, a Potential Anti-Addictive Agent, and Morphine: an in Vivo Microdialysis Study," European Journal of Pharmacology, 199:1, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Martellotta, et al. "Effects of the Calcium Antagonist Isradipine on Cocaine Intravenous Self-Administration in Rats", Psychopharmacologia, 113:3-4, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Martin, et al. "Neuropathic Pain in Cancer Patients: Mechanisms, Syndromes, and Clinical Controversies," Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 14:2, 1997, pp. 99-117. cited by applicant .
Mash, et al. "Ibogaine in the Treatment of Heroin Withdrawal," The Alkaloids 56, 2001, pp. 1-17. cited by applicant .
Mash, et al. "Ligand Binding Profiles of Ibogaine and its O-demethylated Metabolite Noribogaine: Implications for Developing Novel Multi-target Anti-addiction Agents." Society of Neurosciences, vol. 21, 1995, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Mash, et al. "Preclinical screening of an ibogaie metabolite (noribogaine) on cocaine-induced hyperlocomotion and cocaine self-administration." Society of Neurosciences, vol. 22, 1996, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Mash, et al. "Properties of Ibogaine and its Principle Metabolite (12-hydroxyibogamine) at the MK-801 binding site of the NMDA receptor complex," Neuroscience Letters, 192, 1995, pp. 53-56. cited by applicant .
Mateer, et al. "Reversible Ipecac Myopathy," Archives of Neurology, 42:2, 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Matharu, et al. "Preformulation and Development of Ibogaine Injection for the Treatment of Drug Abuse," Pharmaceutical Research, 10: 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Mattingly, et al. "Selective Antagonism of Dopamine D Sub 1 and D Sub 2 Receptors Does Not Block the Development of Behavioral Sensitization to Cocaine," Psychopharmacologia, 114:2, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
McNeish, et al. "The 5-HT Sub 3 Antagonist Zacopride Attenuates Cocaine-Induced Increases in Extracellular Dopamine in Rat Nucleus Accumbens," Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior, 45:4, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Melchior, et al. "Preference for Alcohol Evoked by Tetra Hydro Papaveroline Chronically Infused in the Cerebral Ventricle of the Rat," Pharmacol Biochem Behav, 7:1, 1977, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Mendelson & Mello "Cocaine and Other Commonly Abused Drugs," In Isselbacher et al. (ed.), "Harrison's Principals of Internal Medicine." 13th Ed., McGraw-Hill Inc., 1994, pp. 2429-2433. cited by applicant .
Mendelson, et al. "Cocaine and Other Commonly Abused Drugs." In Isselbacher et al. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine." 1994, pp. 2429-2433. cited by applicant .
Menzies, et al. "Gangrene of the Small Bowel: A Complication of Methysergide Therapy," Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 52:5, 1982, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Metelitsa. "Pharmacological Agents in Controlling Smoking," Biull Vsesoiuznogo Kardiol Nauchn Tsentra, 10:1, 1987, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Millan. "k-Opioid Receptors and Analgesia," Trendes in Pharmacologicla Sciences, 11, 1990, pp. 70-76. cited by applicant .
Mizuhashi, et al. "Antitumor Activities of IKP-104 A 4-1H Pyridizinone Derivative on Cultured and Implanted Tumors," Japanese Journal of Cancer Research, 81:12, 1990, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Montefiori, et al. "In Vitro Evaluation of Mismatched Double-Stranded RNA (Ampligen) for Combination Therapy in the Treatment of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome," AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 5:2, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Mulamba et al., "Alkaloids from tabernanthe pubescens", Journal of Natural Products, 44(2):184-189, 1981. cited by applicant .
Mulamba et al., Alcaloids de Tabernanthe Pubescens. Journal of Natural Products, (1981), 44:(2):184-189. cited by applicant .
Naranjo. "Ibogaine in psychotherapy: psychoanalysis according to Naranjo", part IV, pp. 1-2. http://www.nettuno.it/fiera/electric.italy/bwitif:html. cited by applicant .
Niemann et al, "The Isolation of Rupicoline and Montanine, Two Pseudoindoxyl Alkaloids of Tabernaemontana Rupicola Benth", The Journal of Organic Chemistry, 31(7):2265-2269. cited by applicant .
Nishiyama, et al. "Expression of the Multidrug Transporter, P-Glycoproteiin, in Renal and Transitional Cell Carcinomas," Cancer, 71:11, 1993, pp. 3611-3619. cited by applicant .
Nooter, et al. "Multidrug Resistance (MDR) Genes in Haematological Malignancies," Cytotechnology, 12:1-3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Nunn-Thompson, et al. "Pharmacotherapy for Making Cessation", Clin Pharm, 8:10, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Obach, et al., "Cythochrome P4502D6 Catalyzes the O-Demethylation of the Psychoactive Alkaloid Ibogaine to 12-Hydroxyibogamine," Drug Metabolism and Disposition 26:8, 1998, pp. 764-768. cited by applicant .
O'Hearn, et al. "Degenration of Prukinje Cells in Parasagittal Zones of the Cerebellar Vermis After Treatment with Ibogaine of Harmaline," Neuroscience, 55:2, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
O'Hearn, et al. "Ibogaine Induces Glial Activation in Parasagittal Zones of the Cerebellum," Neuroreport, 4:3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Pablo, et al, "Noribogaine Stimulates Naloxone-Sensitive[35S]GTPgammaS Binding," NeuroReport, 9, 1998, pp. 109-114. (Website Publication Date of Dec. 20, 1997.). cited by applicant .
Pacifici , et al. "Immunological Effect of Cocaine and Host Resistance in Mice," International Journal of Immunotherapy, 8:2, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Palyi. "Survivial Responses to New Cytostatic Hexitols of P388 Mouse and K562 Leukemia Cells in Vitro," Cancer Treatment Reports, 70:2, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Pantazis, et al. "Efficacy of Camptothecin Congeners in the Treatment of Human Breast Carcinoma Xenografts," Oncology Research, 5:8, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
PCT International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Jul. 30, 2013 in related PCT International Patent Application No. PCT/US2012/022255. cited by applicant .
Pehek. "Effects of Cathinone and Amphetamine on the Neurochemistry of Dopamine in Vivo," Neuropharmacology, 29:12, 1990, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Perera, et al. "Tertiary Indole Alkaloids of Tabernaemontana Dichotoma Seeds," Planta Medica, 49:1, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Perrin. "Clinical Pharmacokinetics of Ergotamine in Migraine and Cluster Headache," Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 10:4, 1985, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Popik, et al. "NMDA Antagonist Properties of the pUtative Antiaddictive Drug, Ibogaine," Journal of Pharmaceutical and Experimental Therapeutics, 275:2, 1995, pp. 753-760. cited by applicant .
Popik, et al. "The Putative Anti-Addictive Drug Ibogaine is a Competitive Inhibitor of (SUP 3 H) Binding to the NMDA Receptor Complex", Psychopharmacologia, 114:4, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Popik, et al. "100 Years of Ibogaine: Neurochemical and Pharmacological Actions of a Putative anti-addictive Drug," Pharmacological Reviews 47:2, 1995, pp. 235-253. cited by applicant .
Pulvirenti, et al. "Lisuride Reduces Intravenous Cocaine Self-Administration in Rats," Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 47:4, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Qiu, et al. "The Influence of Chronic Nicotine Treatment on Stress-Induces Gastric Ulceration and Emptying Rate in Rats," Experientia, 48:4, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Radouco-Thomas, et al. "Adverse effects to Psychotomimetics. Proposition of a Psychopharmacological Classification." Pharmacologie, Toxicologie, et abus des psychotomimetiques (hallucinogens), 109, 1974, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Rezvani, et al. "Noribogaine, a Primary Ibogaine Metabolite, Reduces Alcohol Intake in P and Fawn-Hooded Rats." RSA Annual Scientific Meeting, 1995, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Rezvani, et al. "Reduction of Alcohol Intake in Alcohol Preferring Fawn-hooded and P Rats by Noribogaine, the Primary Metabolite of Ibogaine." NIDA Monograph Series 162:281, 1996, Abstract only. cited by applicant .
Ricceri, et al. "Postnatal cocaine Esposure Affects Neonatal Passive Avoidance Performance and Cholinergic Development in Rats," Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 45:2, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Rodriguez, et al. "Cocaine Adminstration Prior to Reactivation Facilitates Later Acquisition of an Avoidance Response in Rats," Psychopharmacologia, 112:2-3, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Rosenmund, et al. "Ibogamin, Ibogain and Epiibogamin" Chemische Berichte, 108, 1975, pp. 1871-1895. cited by applicant .
Sachs, et al. "Corneal Complications Associated with the Use of Crack Cocaine," Ophthalmology, 100:2, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Salmoiraghi, et al. "Effects of LSD 25, BOL 148, Bufotenine, Mescaline and Ibogaine on the Potentiation of Hexobarbital Hypnosis Produced by Serotonin and Reserpine." Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 120:1, 1957, pp. 20-25. cited by applicant .
Samadi-Baboli, et al. "Preparation of Low Density Lipoprotein-9-Methoxy-Illipticin Complex and Its Cytotoxic Effect Against L1210 and P 388 Leukemic Cells in Vitro," European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology , 25:2, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Saper, et al. "Ergotamine Tartrate Dependency: Features and Possible Mechanisms," Clinical Neuropharmacology, 9:3, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Schecter, et al. "Comparison of the Behavioral Effects of Ibogaine from Three Sources: Mediation of Discriminative Activity," European Journal of Pharmacology, 249:1, 1993, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Schneider, et al. "Analysis of the Cardiovascular Action of Ibogaine Hydrochloride." Archives Internationales de Pharmacodynamie et de Therapie, 110, 1957, pp. 92-102. cited by applicant .
Schneider, et al. "Neuropharmacological Studies of Ibogaine: An Indole Alkaloid with Central Stimulant Properties." Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 66, 1957, pp. 765-776. cited by applicant .
Schneider, et al., "Potentiation Action of Ibogaine on Morphine Analgesia" Experiential, 12, 1956, pp. 323-324. cited by applicant .
Schnider, et al. "Use and Abuse of Analgesics in Tension-Type Headache," Cephalalgia, 14:2, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Schuckit & Segal. "Opiod Drug Use," In Isselbacher et al. (ed.), "Harrison's Principals of Internal Medicine." 13th Ed., McGraw-Hill Inc., 1994, 2425-2429. cited by applicant .
Schuckit. "Alcohol and Alcoholism," In Isselbacher et al. (ed.), "Harrison's Principals of Internal Medicine." 13th Ed., McGraw-Hill Inc., 1994, pp. 2420-2425. cited by applicant .
Seeber, et al. "In Vivo Resistance Towards Anthracyclines, Etoposide, and Cis-Diamminedichloroplatinum (II)," Cancer Research, 42:11, 1982, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Sehested, et al. "The Carboxylic Ionophore Monensin Inhibits Active Drug Efflux and Modulates In-Vitro Resistance in Daunorubicin Resistant Enrlich Ascites Tumor Cells," Biochemical Pharmacology, 37:17, 1988, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Sershen, et al. "Ibogaine Antagonizes Cocaine-Induced Locomotor Stimulation in Mice," Life Sciences, 50:15, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Sershen, et al. "Ibogaine Reduces Amphetamine-Induced Locomotor Stimulation in C57BL/6By Mice, but Stimulates Locomotor Activity in Rats," Life Sciences, 51:13, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Sershen, et al. "Ibogaine Reduces Preference for Cocaine Consumption in C57BL/6By Mice," Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 47:1, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Shen, et al. "Antagonists at Excitatory Opioid Receptors on Sensory Neurons in Culture Increase Potency and Specificity of Opiate Analgesics and Attenuate Development of Tolerance/ Dependence," Brain Research, 636:2, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Sheppard. "A Preliminary Investigation of Ibogaine: Case Reports and Recommendations for Further Study." Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 11:4, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Shir, et al. "Neuropathic pain unrelieved by morphine, alleviated by haloperidol," Harefuah 118:8, 1990, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Shook et al. "A cyclic Somatostatin Analog that Precipitates Withdrawal in Morphine-Dependent Mice", NIDA Res. Monogr., 76(Probl. Drug Depend.): abstract only, 1987. cited by applicant .
Sinkula, et al. "Rationale for Design for Biologically Reversible Drug Derivatives: Prodrugs." Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 64:2, 1975, pp. 181-210. cited by applicant .
Slotkin, et al. "A Model of Harmine Metabolism in the Rat." The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 174:3, 1970, pp. 456-462. cited by applicant .
Slotkin, et al. "Blood Levels and Urinary Excretion of Harmine and its Metabolites in Man and Rats." The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 173:1, 1970, pp. 26-30. cited by applicant .
Slotkin, et al. "Urinary Metabolites of Harmine in the Rat and their Inhibition of Monoamine Oxidase." Biochemical Pharmacology, 19, 1970, pp. 125-131. cited by applicant .
Sloviter, et al. "A Common Mechanism of Lysergic Acid, Indolealkylamine and Phenethylamine Hallucinogens: Serotonergic Mediation of Behavioral Effects in Rats." Journal of Pharmacological Experimental Therapy, 214:2, 1980, pp. 231-238. cited by applicant .
Smith. "Interaction of Biogenic Amines with Ethanol," Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 56, 1975, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Snyder, et al., "Practical HPLC Method Development", 1997, 2nd Ed., pp. 214-218, 266, 267, 282 & 283, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. cited by applicant .
Solinas et. al., "Solid supported reagents and catch-and-release techniques in organic synthesis". Synthesis 20070816 DE LNKDDOI: 10.1055/S-2007-983806, No. 16., pp. 2409-2453, 2007. cited by applicant .
Solinas, et al. "Solid-Supported Reagents and Catch-and-Release Techniques in Organic Synthesis", Synthesis 2007:16, 2007, pp. 2409-2453. cited by applicant .
Stahl, et al., "Handbook of Pharmaceutical Salts", 1998, p. 250 John Wiley & Sons. cited by applicant .
Stella. "Pro-drugs as Novel Drug Delivery Systems", ed. Higuchi, T. et al., American Chemical Society, Washington D.C., 1975, pp. 1-49. cited by applicant .
Stella. "Pro-drugs: An Overview and Definition." Prodrugs as Novel Drug Delivery System. ACS Symposium Series: 1975, pp. 1-115. cited by applicant .
Sugiyama, et al. "Quantitative Analysis of Cell-Kill Effects of Anticancer Drugs: Consideration of Both In Vitro and In Vivo Expreimental Systems." Gan To Kagaku Ryoho, 14:12, 1987, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Tarnower, et al., "Ergotism Masquerading as Arteritis," Postgradate Medicine, 85:1, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Teoh, et al. "Buprenorphine Effects on Morphine- and Cocaine- Induced Subjective Responses by Drug-Dependent Men," Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 14:1, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Tfelt-Hansen, et al. "Nitroglycerin for Ergotism. Experimental Studies in Vitro and in Migraine Patients and Treatment of an Overt Case," European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 22:2, 1982, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Torrenegra, et al. "Alkaloids of stemmadenia grandiflora", Phytochemistry, 27:6, 1988, pp. 1843-1848. cited by applicant .
Tsuruo. "Multidrug Resistance: A Transport System of Antitumor Agents and Xenobiotics," Princess Takamatsu Symp, 21, 1990, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Uldry, et al. "Cerebrovascular Accidents in Relation to Drug Consumption or Drug Abuse," Schweizerische Rundschau Fur Medizin Praxis, 78:23, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Valadez, et al. "Persistence of the Ability of Amphetamine Preexposure to Facilitate Acquistion of Cocaine Self-Administration," Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, 47:1, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Valencia, et al. "Obovatine, a New Bisindole Alkaloid from Stemmadenia Obovata," Journal of Natural Products, 58:1, 1995, pp. 134-137. cited by applicant .
Vescovi, et al. "Successful Treatment of Opiate Withdrawal Using Lysine Acetylsalicylate," Current Therapeutic Research, Clinical and Experimental, 33:5, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Villalba, et al. "Uses and Abuses of Ipecacuana Syrup", Farmacia Clinica, 9:1, 1992, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Wells, et al. "Recognition and Treatment of Arterial Insufficiency from Cafergot," Journal of Vascular Surgury, 4:1, 1986, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Whitaker, et al. "High Affinity 3H-Serotonin Binding to Caudate: Inhibition by Hallucinogenic and Serotonergic Drugs," Psychopharmacology 59, 1978, pp. 1-5. cited by applicant .
Whitaker, et al. "Selective Labeling of Serotonin Receptors by d'(3H)Lysergic Acid Diethylamide in Calf Caudate." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 75:12, 1978, pp. 5783-5787. cited by applicant .
Whittaker, et al. "Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Paralysis in Patients Receiving Vincristine and Vinblastine", British Medical Journal, 1:6071, 1977, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Widler, et al. "Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics of Khat: a Controlled Study," Clinical Pharmacology Therapy, 55:5, 1994, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Wildmann. "Heterocycles as Physiological Ligands for the Benzodiazepine Receptor and for Other Binding Sites", Pharmacology Residency, 21:6, 1989, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Williams, et al. "The `Alice in Wonderland` Experience Ergot Alkaloid Therapy for Prolactin-Secreting Pituitary Tumors," The Western Journal of Medicine, 138:3, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Wishart, et al. "Is Multidrug Resistance Relevant in Breast Cancer," European Journal of Surgical Oncology, 17:5, 1991, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Witt, et al. "Pharmacodynamic and Pharmacokinetic Characterization of Poly(Ethylene glycol) Conjugation to Met-Enkephalin Analog [D-Pen2,D-Pen5]-enkephalin (DPDPE)", Journal of Pharmcological and Experimental Therapy, 298:2, 2001, pp. 848-856. cited by applicant .
Witt, et al. "Pluronic P85 Block Copolymer Enhances Opioid Pepetide Analgesia," Journal of Pharmcology and Experimental Therapy, 303:2, 2002, pp. 760-767. cited by applicant .
Worz. "Effects and Risks of Psychotropic and Analgesic Combinations," American Journal of Medicine, 75:5A, 1983, abstract only. cited by applicant .
Yang, et al., "Prodrug based optimal drug delivery via membrane transporter/receptor," Expert. Opin. Biol. Ther., (2001), 1(2):159-175. cited by applicant .
Zetler, et al. "Pharmacokinetics in the Rat of the Hallucinogenic Alkaloids Harmine and Harmaline." Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, 285, 1974, pp. 273-292. cited by applicant .
Zetler, et al. "Cerebral Pharmacokinetics of Tremor-Producing Harmala and Iboga Alkaloids" Pharmacology, 7:4, 1972, pp. 237-248. cited by applicant .
Buchi et al., "Chemical Transformations of Ibogaine," Journal of the American Chemical Society, 88:11, Jun. 5, 1966, pp. 2532-2535. cited by applicant .
Extended European Search Report on EP Application 13740942.1, mailed Sep. 10, 2015. cited by applicant .
Glick SD et al., Development of novel medications for drugs addiction. The legacy od an African shrub. AnnN.Y.Acad.Sci. 2000; 909:808-103 abstract[on-line] [found on Aug. 21, 2015]www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10911925. cited by applicant .
International Search Report & Written Opinion for PCT/US2014/013063 dated Oct. 8, 2015. cited by applicant .
JD Roberts, "Separation and Purification. Identification of Organic Compounds by Spectroscopic Techniques," Chapter 9, 1977 pp. 257-349. cited by applicant .
Office Action on Russian Application 2013102923/15 dated Aug. 11, 2015 English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Peterson, A. L. et al., Treatment of Parkinson's disease with trophic factors. Neurotherapeutics, 2008, vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 270-280. cited by applicant .
RN:5500-12-9,Registry (STN) [online] , Nov. 16, 1984. cited by applicant .
RN:766444-34-2,Registry (STN) [online], Oct. 20, 2004. cited by applicant .
Wang et al., Targeted Delivery of GDNF through the Blood-Brain Barrier by MRI-Guided Focused Ultrasound, PLoS One, vol. 7, Issue 7, Article e52925, internal pp. 1-8, Dec. 2012. cited by applicant .
Ahuja, Satinder (Ed.), "Chiral Separation Methods for Pharmaceutical and Biotechnological Products", John Wiley & Sons (published on line Oct. 2010). cited by applicant .
Altman et al., "An Improved Cu-Based Catalyst System for the Reactions of Alcohols with Aryl Halides," J. Org. Chem., (2008), 73(1):284-286. cited by applicant .
Baumann et al., In vivo Neurobiological Effects of Ibogaine and Its o-Desmethyl Metabolite, 12 Hydroxyibogamine (Noribogaine), in Rats, J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 2001, vol. 297, No. 2, pp. 531-539. cited by applicant .
Beesley et al., "Chiral Chromatography", John Wiley & Sons (1998). cited by applicant .
Caccamese et al., "Chiral HPLC Separation and CD Spectra of the Enantiomers of the Alkaloid Tacamonine and Related Compounds", Chirality (2001), 13:691-93. cited by applicant .
CALPUS printout of Watts et al. "Alkaloids from stemmadenia Species", I. Alkaloids of S. Donnellsmithiii and S. Galleottiana, (1958), vol. 2, pp. 173-182. cited by applicant .
CALPUS printout of Zetler. "Some Pharmacological Properties of 12 Natural and 11 Partially Synthetic Indole Alkaloids from Tropical Apocyanaceae of the Subtribe Tabernaemontaninae", Arzneimittel-Forschung, (1964), 14:12, pp. 1277-1286. cited by applicant .
CAS Registry record for "Noribogaine" (1984). cited by applicant .
Chaturvedula et al, "New Cytotoxic Indole Alkaloids from Tabe rnaemontana calcarea from the Madagascar Rainforest", Journal of Natural Products, (2003), vol. 66, pp. 528-531. cited by applicant .
Corey, E.J., "Catalytic Enantioselective Diels-Alder Reactions: Methods, Mechanistic Fundamentals, Pathways, and Applications," Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., (2002), 41:1650-1667. cited by applicant .
European extended search report for EP Appl. No. 12763567.0 dated Oct. 20, 2014. cited by applicant .
European Office Action dated Apr. 17, 2015 in European Patent Application No. 11743404. cited by applicant .
Extended European Search Report issued on 12754746,5, mailed Apr. 23, 2015. cited by applicant .
Futatsugi, et al., "Oxazaborolidine-Derived Lewis Acid Assited Lewis Acid as a Moisture-Tolerant Catalyst for Enantioselective Diels-Alder Reactions," Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., (2005), 44:1484-1487. cited by applicant .
International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/US2012/071052, issued Jun. 23, 2015. cited by applicant .
Jana et al., "Progress in the Synthesis of Iboga-alkaloids and their Congeners," Organic Preparation and Procedures International, (2011), 43:541-573. cited by applicant .
Jana et al., "Total synthesis of ibogaine, epiibogaine and their analogues", Tetrahedron. 2012. vol. 68, pp. 7155-7165. cited by applicant .
Jarraya, et al., "N-(Hydroxymethyl)ibogaine," Acta Cryst., (2008), E64--vol. 64(9):o1739. cited by applicant .
Kagan, et al., "Catalytic Asymmetric Diels-Alder Reactions," Chem. Rev., (1992), 92:1007-1019. cited by applicant .
Kingston et al., "Cytotoxicity of Modified Indole Alkaloids", Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 68:11, Nov. 1979, pp. 1403-1405. cited by applicant .
Kontrimaviciute et al., "Liquid chromatography-electrospray mass spectrometry determination of ibogaine and noribogaine in human plasma and whole blood: Application to a poisoning involving Tabernanthe iboga root" J. Chromatog. B (2006), 843, 131-41. cited by applicant .
Kuehne et al., "Biomimetric syntheses of indole alkaloids. 11. Syntheses of .beta.-carboline and indoloazepine intermediates," J. Org. Chem., (1985), 50(7):919-924. cited by applicant .
Kuroch et al., "Voacanga Africana: Chemistry, Quality and Pharmacological Activity" ACS Symposium Series 1021 (African Natural Plant Products), (2009), 363-80. cited by applicant .
Leonard, J. "A Practical Introduction to Separation and Purification techniques for the Beginning Organic Chemistry Laboratory", Chem. Ed. (1981), 58, 1022-23. cited by applicant .
Lewis, "Studies on the synthesis and biosynthesis of indole alkaloids", The Faculty of Graduate Studies Department of Chemistry University of British Columbia, (1978), See compound 220, Figure 57. abstract only. cited by applicant .
Naikwadi et al., "Liquid Chromatography of Phenolic Compounds on a Microbore Anion Exchange Resin Column," Analytical Chemistry, 56:8, 1984, p. 1525-1527. cited by applicant .
Office Action on Japanese Application 2013-520892, mailed Jul. 7, 2015. cited by applicant .
PCT International Preliminary Report on Patentability for PCT/US2012/067629 dated Nov. 13, 2014. cited by applicant .
PCT International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Dec. 8, 2014 for PCT Application No. PCT/US2014/031364. cited by applicant .
PCT International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Jan. 21, 2015 in PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US2014/034826. cited by applicant .
PCT International Search Report and Written Opinion for related PCT/US2013/022874, dated Jun. 28, 2013. cited by applicant .
Sjostromt et al., "Ion Exchange Separation Method for Microdetermination of Tropane Alkaloids in the Presence of Mkphine," 1959, XP55182014. cited by applicant .
Stevenson et al, (Ed.), "Chiral Separations", Plenum Press (1987). cited by applicant .
Still, et al., "Rapid Chromatorgraphic Technique for Preparative Separations with Moderate Resolutions", J. Org. Chem., (1978), 43, 2923-25. cited by applicant .
Third Office Action on Chinese Application 201180038173.7, issued Jun. 17, 2015--English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Toda, Fumio (Ed.), "Enantiomer Separation: Fundamentals and Practical Methods", Kluwer Academic Publishers (2004). cited by applicant .
Toyo'oka, "Resolution of chiral drugs by liquid chromatography based upon diastereomer formation with chiral derivatization reagents", J. Biochem. Biophys. Methods 54, 25-56 (2002). cited by applicant .
Trost, et al., "A Total Synthesis of Racemic and Optically Active Ibogamine. Utilization and Mechanism of a New Silver Ion Assisted Palladium Catalyzed Cyclization," J. Am. Chem. Soc., (1978), 100(12):3930-3931. cited by applicant .
Trost, et al., "Stereocontrolled Approach to 1,4-Disubstitued 1,3-Dienes," J. Org. Chem., (1978), 43(24):4559-4564. cited by applicant .
Office Action on Chinese Application 201110083808.7, mailed Jul. 15, 2015 English translation. cited by applicant .
Office Action on Chinese Application 201280058362.5, issued Aug. 5, 2015, English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Communication issued on EP 11743404.3, mailed Nov. 16, 2015. cited by applicant .
Office Action issued on Chinese Application 201180038173.7, mailed Jan. 8, 2016, English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Office Action issued on Russian Application 2013139382, mailed Dec. 4, 2015, English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Office Action on Chinese Application 201110083808.7, mailed Jul. 15, 2015 English translation provided. cited by applicant .
Russian Office Action on Application 2013102923/15 dated May 8, 2015, English translation included. cited by applicant .
Vutukuri et al., "A Mild Deprotection Strategy for Allyl-Protecting Groups and Its Implications in Sequence Specific Dendrimer Synthesis," J.Org. Chem, vol. 68, 2003, pp. 1146-1149. cited by applicant .
Examination Report issued on Australian Application 2012209332, mailed Feb. 10, 2016. cited by applicant .
Second Office Action issued on Chinese Application 201280058362.5, mailed Feb. 22, 2016 English translation included. cited by applicant.

Primary Examiner: Mulcahy; Peter D
Assistant Examiner: Hu; Henry
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Foley & Lardner LLP

Parent Case Text



CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part application of allowed U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/104,406, filed May 10, 2011 now U.S. Pat. No. 8,765,737, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. .sctn.119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/333,476, filed on May 11, 2010, and to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/419,772, filed on Dec. 3, 2010, all of which applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Claims



What is claimed is:

1. An ion exchange resin having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group, wherein the resin is essentially free of ibogaine or the resin comprises ibogaine.

2. The ion exchange of claim 1, wherein the resin is essentially free of ibogaine.

3. The ion exchange of claim 1, wherein the resin comprises ibogaine.

4. A composition comprising the ion exchange resin of claim 1 and an aqueous solution of pH 10 or more.

5. A purification column comprising the ion exchange resin of claim 1.
Description



FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates generally to methods and compositions for purifying the non-addictive alkaloid noribogaine.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Noribogaine is a well known derivative of ibogaine and is sometimes referred to as 12-hydroxyibogaine. It is a metabolite of ibogaine. U.S. Pat. No. 2,813,873 claims noribogaine albeit as "12-O-demethylibogaine" while providing an incorrect structural formula for ibogaine. The structure of noribogaine has now been thoroughly evaluated and is found to combine the features of tyrptamine, tetrahydrohavaine and indolazepines. Noribogaine can be depicted by the following formula:

##STR00001##

Noribogaine and its pharmaceutically acceptable salts have recently received significant attention as a non-addictive alkaloid useful in treating drug dependency (U.S. Pat. No. 6,348,456) and as a potent analgesic (U.S. Pat. No. 7,220,737).

Conventionally, noribogaine is prepared by demethylation of naturally occurring ibogaine:

##STR00002## which is isolated from Tabernanth iboga, a shrub of West Africa. Demethylation may be accomplished by conventional techniques such as by reaction with boron tribromide/methylene chloride at room temperature followed by conventional purification.

Ibogaine possesses hallucinogenic properties. It is a Schedule 1-controlled substance as provided by the US Food and Drug Administration. Accordingly, methods for preparing noribogaine from ibogaine require high levels of assurance that contamination with unacceptable levels of ibogaine is avoided. As above, a one-step method for preparation of noribogaine from ibogaine via demethylation does not provide the requisite assurance that ibogaine will consistently be removed as a potential contaminant.

Accordingly, there is an ongoing need to provide a method for preparing noribogaine from ibogaine wherein any ibogaine contamination of noribogaine can be effectively and repeatedly minimized.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

This invention provides methods and compositions for the preparation of noribogaine wherein contamination by ibogaine is predictably reduced to acceptable levels. In particular, this invention employs the use of solid supports to effect separation of noribogaine from ibogaine such that any ibogaine contamination is significantly reduced if not essentially eliminated.

Accordingly, in one of its method aspects, this invention is directed to a method for preparing and purifying noribogaine which method comprises:

a) converting ibogaine to noribogaine wherein the indole nitrogen is optionally protected by an amino protecting group;

b) attaching noribogaine to a solid support via the hydroxyl group of noribogaine, or via the hydroxylate anion of noribogaine, so as to form a suspension of solid supports having noribogaine bound thereto;

c) removing residual ibogaine from said suspension;

d) cleaving and recovering noribogaine from the solid support; and

e) optionally repeating steps b), c) and d) up to 5 times;

f) purifying noribogaine as recovered per above.

In another of its method aspects, this invention is directed to a method for preparing and purifying noribogaine which method comprises:

a) covalently attaching ibogaine to a solid support via the amino group of ibogaine so as to form a suspension of solid supports having ibogaine bound thereto;

b) converting ibogaine to noribogaine under conditions wherein the level of ibogaine bound to the solid support is less than about 0.1 weight percent;

c) cleaving and recovering noribogaine from the solid support; and

d) purifying noribogaine as recovered per above.

In yet another of its method aspects, this invention is directed to a method for separating and purifying noribogaine, which method comprises: a. providing a solution comprising ibogaine and noribogaine; b. contacting the solution with a solid support, wherein the solid support binds noribogaine but does not bind ibogaine, whereby a suspension comprising solid supports having noribogaine bound thereto is formed; c. removing ibogaine from the suspension; d. recovering noribogaine from the suspension; and e. purifying noribogaine. In this aspect of the invention, steps (b), (c), (d) and (e) are optionally repeated. The purified noribogaine from step (f) comprises residual ibogaine at less than about 50 ppm, or less than about 10 ppm.

Further to this aspect of the invention, the step of purifying noribogaine comprises: a. contacting the recovered noribogaine from step (e) with a solid support in an aqueous solution, wherein the solid support ionically binds to noribogaine, and wherein ibogaine does not ionically bind to the solid support, whereby a suspension comprising solid supports having noribogaine ionically bound thereto is formed; b. removing ibogaine from the suspension; c. eluting noribogaine from the solid supports in the suspension; and d. recovering noribogaine from the suspension.

Further to this aspect of the invention, the solid support is an anion exchange resin. Preferably, the aqueous solution is at a pH of about 10 or more, such that noribogaine can also be present as the phenoxide of noribogaine.

In one of its composition aspects, this invention is directed to a solid support having ibogaine or noribogaine covalently bound thereto through a cleavable linker.

In one embodiment, the solid support of this invention comprises ibogaine covalently bound thereto through a cleavable linker. In another embodiment, the solid support of this invention comprises noribogaine covalently bound thereto through a cleavable linker.

In another one of its composition aspects, this invention is directed to an ion exchange resin having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group.

In yet another one of its composition aspects, this invention is directed to a composition comprising an ion exchange resin having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group in an aqueous solution of pH 10 or more.

Also provided by this invention are purification columns comprising an ion exchange resin having, for example, noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group, or having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's 12-hydroxy functional group.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

This invention is directed to methods and compositions comprising noribogaine and, in particular, methods and compositions comprising highly pure noribogaine. However, prior to describing this invention in greater detail, the following terms will first be defined.

It is to be understood that this invention is not limited to particular embodiments described, as such may, of course, vary. It is also to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting, since the scope of the present invention will be limited only by the appended claims.

It must be noted that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms "a", "an", and "the" include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to "a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient" includes a plurality of such excipients.

1. Definitions

Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. As used herein the following terms have the following meanings

As used herein, the term "comprising" or "comprises" is intended to mean that the compositions and methods include the recited elements, but not excluding others. "Consisting essentially of" when used to define compositions and methods, shall mean excluding other elements of any essential significance to the combination for the stated purpose. Thus, a composition consisting essentially of the elements as defined herein would not exclude other materials or steps that do not materially affect the basic and novel characteristic(s) of the claimed invention. "Consisting of" shall mean excluding more than trace elements of other ingredients and substantial method steps. Embodiments defined by each of these transition terms are within the scope of this invention.

The term "about" when used before a numerical designation, e.g., temperature, time, amount, and concentration, including range, indicates approximations which may vary by (+) or (-) 10%, 5% or 1%.

As stated above, the invention is directed to compositions comprising noribogaine and an excipient to facilitate transport across the blood brain barrier.

As used herein, the term "noribogaine" refers to the compound:

##STR00003## and salts thereof. Conventionally, noribogaine is prepared by demethylation of naturally occurring ibogaine:

##STR00004## which is isolated from Tabernanth iboga, a shrub of West Africa. Demethylation may be accomplished by conventional techniques such as by reaction with boron tribromide/methylene chloride at room temperature, or reaction with lithium diphenylphosphine (preferably an excess thereof), followed by conventional purification. This invention is not limited to any particular chemical form of noribogaine and the compound may be present as either as a free base or as an acceptable addition salt.

The term "solid support" refers to a material having a rigid or semi-rigid surface which contain or can be derivatized to contain reactive functionality which covalently links noribogaine or ibogaine to the surface thereof through a cleavable linker. Such materials are well known in the art and include, by way of example, silica, synthetic silicates, biogenic silicates, porous glass, hydrogels, silicate-containing minerals, synthetic polymers, polystyrene, polypropylene, polyacrylamide, polyethylene glycol, polyacrylamide and copolymers thereof including copolymers of polystyrene/polyethylene glycol and polyacrylamide/polyethylene glycol, and the like.

As used herein, the term "ion exchange resin" refers to an insoluble organic polymer containing charged groups that attract and hold oppositely charged ions present in a surrounding solution in exchange for counterions previously held. Suitable ion exchange resins to be used herein contain cationic groups that attract and hold anions present in a surrounding solution, and are sometimes referred to as "anion exchange resins".

As used herein, the term "cleavable linking arms" refers to linking arms, which are a chemical group or a covalent bond which covalently attaches at one end to a solid support and at the other end to ibogaine or noribogaine. At least one of the covalent bonds of the linking arm which attaches ibogaine or noribogaine to the solid support can be readily broken by specific chemical or enzymatic reactions, thereby providing for ibogaine or noribogaine free of the solid support. The chemical or enzymatic reactions employed to break the covalent bond of the linking arm are selected so as to be specific for bond breakage thereby preventing unintended reactions occurring elsewhere on the compound. The cleavable linking group is selected relative to ibogaine/noribogaine formed on the solid support so as to prevent premature cleavage of either ibogaine or noribogaine from the solid support as well as not to interfere with any of the procedures employed during synthesis on the support. Suitable cleavable linking arms are well known in the art, and may include such groups as carbonate groups, carbamate groups, amide groups, and the like. In a preferred embodiment, the cleavable linker arm contains no more than 10 atoms. More preferably, the cleavable linker contains from 1 to 4 carbon atoms and from 2 to 4 heteroatoms selected from oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, S(O) and S(O).sub.2.

As used herein, the term "an acceptable addition salt" refers to pharmaceutically acceptable salts of a compound of Formula I which salts are derived from a variety of organic and inorganic counter ions well known in the art and include, by way of example only, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, ammonium, tetraalkylammonium, and the like; and when the molecule contains a basic functionality, salts of organic or inorganic acids, such as hydrochloride, hydrobromide, tartrate, mesylate, acetate, maleate, oxalate and the like.

As used herein, the term "protecting group" or "Pg" refers to well known functional groups which, when bound to a functional group, render the resulting protected functional group inert to the reaction conditions to be conducted on other portions of the compound and which, at the appropriate time, can be reacted to regenerate the original functionality. The identity of the protecting group is not critical and is selected to be compatible with the remainder of the molecule. In one embodiment, the protecting group is an "amino protecting group" which protects the amino functionality of ibogaine or noribogaine during the reactions described herein. Examples of conventional amino protecting groups include, for instance, benzyl, acetyl, oxyacetyl, carboxybenzyl (Cbz), and the like. In another embodiment, the protecting group is a "hydroxy protecting group" which protects the hydroxyl functionality of noribogaine. Examples of hydroxyl protecting groups include, for instance, benzyl, p-methoxybenzyl, p-nitrobenzyl, allyl, trityl, dialkylsilylethers, such as dimethylsilyl ether, and trialkylsilyl ethers such as trimethylsilyl ether, triethylsilyl ether, and t-butyldimethylsilyl ether; esters such as benzoyl, acetyl, phenylacetyl, formyl, mono-, di-, and trihaloacetyl such as chloroacetyl, dichloroacetyl, trichloroacetyl, trifluoroacetyl; and carbonates such as methyl, ethyl, 2,2,2-trichloroethyl, allyl, benzyl, and p-nitrophenyl. Additional examples of hydroxy protecting groups may be found in standard reference works such as Greene and Wuts, Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis., 2d Ed., 1991, John Wiley & Sons, and McOmie Protective Groups in Organic Chemistry, 1975, Plenum Press.

Preparation and Purification of Noribogaine

The compounds of this invention can be prepared from readily available starting materials using the following general methods and procedures. It will be appreciated that where typical or preferred process conditions (i.e., reaction temperatures, times, mole ratios of reactants, solvents, pressures, etc.) are given, other process conditions can also be used unless otherwise stated. Optimum reaction conditions may vary with the particular reactants or solvent used, but such conditions can be determined by one skilled in the art by routine optimization procedures.

Additionally, as will be apparent to those skilled in the art, conventional protecting groups may be necessary to prevent certain functional groups from undergoing undesired reactions. Suitable protecting groups for various functional groups as well as suitable conditions for protecting and deprotecting particular functional groups are well known in the art. For example, numerous protecting groups are described in T. W. Greene and G. M. Wuts, Protecting Groups in Organic Synthesis, Fourth Edition, Wiley, N.Y., 2007, and references cited therein.

Furthermore, the compounds of this invention will typically contain one or more chiral centers. Accordingly, if desired, such compounds can be prepared or isolated as pure stereoisomers, i.e., as individual enantiomers or diastereomers, or as stereoisomer-enriched mixtures. All such stereoisomers (and enriched mixtures) are included within the scope of this invention, unless otherwise indicated. Pure stereoisomers (or enriched mixtures) may be prepared using, for example, optically active starting materials or stereoselective reagents well-known in the art. Alternatively, racemic mixtures of such compounds can be separated using, for example, chiral column chromatography, chiral resolving agents and the like.

It is contemplated that noribogaine can be prepared and/or purified from ibogaine by utilizing solid support as shown in the following Schemes, where PG represents an amine protecting group, LG represents a leaving group (e.g. a halo or alcohol), L represents a cleavable linking group (e.g. a carbonyl compound such as a carbonate or carbamate) and the shaded circle represents a solid support. In the following Schemes, the O-demethylation of the aryl methoxy group to provide the corresponding phenol can be accomplishing using any suitable method known in the art. Suitable reagents include a Lewis acid (e.g. BBr.sub.3, AlCl.sub.3), a nucleophile (e.g. RS--, N.sub.3--, SCN--), NaCN at low pH (e.g. pH 12), lithium diphenylphosphine (preferably an excess thereof), and the like. In some embodiments, the O-demethylation should be performed without affecting the linkage to the solid support. Suitable reagents can be readily ascertained by one of skill in the art and can be found, for example, in T. W. Greene and G. M. Wuts, Protecting Groups in Organic Synthesis, Fourth Edition, Wiley, N.Y., 2007 (see, e.g., the reactivity charts at pages 1006-1008 and 1022-1032), and references cited therein.

##STR00005##

Noribogaine 5 can be prepared and purified from ibogaine 10 by any one of the routes shown in Scheme 1. Noribogaine, compound 5, is differentiated from ibogaine by virtue of the fact that the methoxy group of ibogaine has been converted to a hydroxyl group in noribogaine. In one embodiment, the indole amine of ibogaine can be protected using an amine protecting group to provide compound 1, followed by either tandem O-demethylation and removal of the protecting group using L-selectride.RTM., for example, or sequential O-demethylation and removal of the protecting group to provide noribogaine 5. In addition, in one embodiment, noribogaine can be directly prepared and purified from the O-demethylation of ibogaine using methods known in the art and then purified by appending noribogaine to a solid support (compound 12 or 13), washing any contaminants, cleaving the linking group L, and recovering the noribogaine 5. In the above syntheses, one or more of the noribogaine or intermediates shown above can be purified using standard purification techniques known in the art (e.g. column chromatography, HPLC, and the like). Compounds of formula 11 are commercially available or can be synthesized in one or two steps from commercially available starting materials (see, e.g. commercially available resins from Sigma-Aldrich.RTM.).

In one preferred embodiment, purification techniques can be used to maximize the purity of the recovered noribogaine. In one embodiment, noribogaine can be contacted with a suitable ion exchange resin at a pH where the phenol group has deprotonated to a sufficient degree such that these compounds are suitable for purification. Typically for phenol deprotonation, a pH of 10 or greater is used. As ibogaine does not have an ionizable phenolic group, it will not bind to the ion exchange resin and can thus be eluted from column and separated from the resin-bound noribogaine. Suitable ion exchange resins are commercially available and include, but are not intended to be limited to Amberlite.RTM. anion exchange resin, Toyopearl.RTM. anion exchange resin, Lewatit.RTM. anion exchange resin, Dowex.RTM. anion exchange resin, Diaion.TM. anion exchange resin, and Amberlyst.RTM. anion exchange resin (Sigma Aldrich, Inc.).

In yet another of its method aspects, this invention is directed to a method for separating and purifying noribogaine by providing a solution comprising ibogaine and noribogaine and then contacting the solution with a solid support which binds to noribogaine but does not bind ibogaine, whereby a suspension comprising solid supports having noribogaine bound thereto is formed. Ibogaine is then removed from the suspension-and then noribogaine is recovered and purified. It is to be understood that, prior to the purification step, the steps preceding purification can be optionally repeated such that the purified noribogaine comprises residual ibogaine at less than about 50 ppm, or less than about 10 ppm.

According to this aspect of the invention, noribogaine is purified by contacting the recovered noribogaine with a solid support in an aqueous solution, preferably at a pH of about 10 or more, such that noribogaine is or can be present in the form of the phenoxide of noribogaine, wherein the solid support ionically binds to noribogaine but ibogaine does not ionically bind to the solid support, such that a suspension comprising solid supports having noribogaine ionically bound thereto is formed. Ibogaine is then removed from the suspension, noribogaine eluted from the solid supports, and then noribogaine is recovered.

In this aspect of the invention, the solid support is an anion exchange resin. The anion exchange resin can be selected from commercially available anion exchange resins known in the art, including but not limited to Amberlite IRA-120.RTM. anion exchange resin, Purolite A-510.RTM. anion exchange resin, Dowex XZ.RTM. anion exchange resin and Dowex 1-X8.RTM. anion exchange resin (Sigma Aldrich, Inc.).

In one of its composition aspects, this invention is directed to an ion exchange resin having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group.

In another one of its composition aspects, this invention is directed to a composition comprising an ion exchange resin having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group in an aqueous solution of pH 10 or more.

Also provided by this invention are purification columns comprising an ion exchange resin having, for example, noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's phenoxide functional group, or having noribogaine ionically bound thereto through the anion of noribogaine's 12-hydroxy functional group.

Accordingly, in one of its composition aspects, there is provided an aqueous solution having a pH of at least 10 and a compound of the formula:

##STR00006##

The purification process typically comprises pretreating or washing the resin with a solvent system which has the same pH, and other components such buffers, stabilizers, etc., that will be used to dissolve the noribogaine or salt thereof ("wash solvent"). Washing preferably includes passing at least 1 void volume (the volume of solvent needed to fill the resin vessel) of the wash solvent through the resin under ambient conditions. Subsequently, noribogaine is added to the same solvent system used as the wash solvent at a concentration preferably less than the saturation concentration for noribogaine. Noribogaine may be present as the phenolic anion under these conditions and, accordingly, both will bind to the anion exchange resin while other compounds lacking an anionic charge (i.e. ibogaine) will pass through the resin. Elution of the purified noribogaine can be then be accomplished using a cation-containing solution.

Accordingly, in another of its composition aspects, there is provided an anion exchange resin comprising an aqueous solvent system and a pH of at least 10 and either compound 2a or compound 4a bound thereto.

In one embodiment, noribogaine can be prepared and purified from ibogaine in the manner described in Scheme 2 below:

##STR00007## wherein Pg is hydrogen or an amino protecting group and the shaded circle represents a solid support.

Specifically, in Scheme 2, amino protected ibogaine, compound 1, is contacted with boron tribromide in methylene chloride or lithium diphenylphosphine using conditions well known in the art to provide for the amino protected noribogaine, compound 2.

In Scheme 2, attachment of amino protected noribogaine, compound 2, to a solid support is accomplished by use of a chloroformate/solid support, compound 3, under conventional conditions to provide for compound 4 wherein the carbonate group is shown for illustrative purposes only as the cleavable linking group. Other cleavable linkers can likewise be used in Scheme 2. As amino protected ibogaine does not contain a functional group reactive with compound 3, only amino protected noribogaine, compound 2, will react with the solid support and provide for compound 4. Repeated washing of compound 4 will remove amino protected ibogaine contaminating the sample of amino protected noribogaine used in this reaction. Furthermore, at any time, a small portion of the solid support can be removed to provide a sample of noribogaine (after cleavage and deprotection). The sample can then be analyzed for purity relative to any ibogaine present by conventional methods such as GC/MS, NMR, C.sup.13-NMR, etc.

Upon achieving the desired level of purity of noribogaine relative to any contaminating ibogaine, noribogaine, compound 5, can be recovered from the solid support by cleavage of the cleavable linker and subsequent deprotection of the amino group. Both cleavage and deprotection are well known in the art.

As desired, exceptionally pure noribogaine, compound 5, can be obtained by repeating the process of forming the amino protected noribogaine, compound 2, binding compound 2 to a solid support via the hydroxyl group of amino protected noribogaine and washing any contaminating ibogaine from the solid support. By repeating this process as often as necessary and preferably no more than 5 times, it is contemplated that noribogaine having less than 5 ppm ibogaine and preferably less than 100 ppm ibogaine can be prepared.

In another embodiment, noribogaine can be prepared and purified from ibogaine in the manner described in Scheme 3 below:

##STR00008##

In Scheme 3, ibogaine, compound 10, is bound via conventional techniques to a solid support, compound 11, through a cleavable linker arm which, for the sake of illustration only, is depicted as a carbamate bond in resulting compound 12. Compound 12 is then contacted with boron tribromide in methylene chloride or lithium diphenylphosphine using conditions well known in the art to provide for the noribogaine bound via the indole nitrogen to a solid support, compound 13. Cleavage of the cleavable linker in compound 13 provides for noribogaine, compound 5. In certain embodiments, compound 5 can be directly obtained from compound 12 using a reducing agent (e.g. L-Selectride.RTM.). See U.S. Pat. No. 6,291,675.

In one embodiment, compound 5 can be purified by conventional techniques including high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and the purity level of the resulting purified compound confirmed by GC/MS. Alternatively, compound 5 can be used in Scheme 2 as recited above by attaching a solid support to the hydroxyl functionality. In either case, very high levels of noribogaine purity can be obtained.

The following synthetic and biological examples are offered to illustrate this invention and are not to be construed in any way as limiting the scope of this invention. Unless otherwise stated, all temperatures are in degrees Celsius.

EXAMPLES

In the examples below, the following abbreviations have the following meanings. If an abbreviation is not defined, it has its generally accepted meaning

Example 1

Synthesis and Purification of Noribogaine from Ibogaine

Example 1 illustrates one method for the synthesis and purification of noribogaine from ibogaine which method follows Scheme 4 below:

##STR00009##

Specifically, in Scheme 4, ibogaine is contacted with a stoichiometric excess of benzyl chloroformate in an inert solvent such as methylene chloride. The reaction mixture further contains at least a stoichiometric equivalent of diisopropylethylamine relative to ibogaine so as to scavenge the acid generated during the reaction. The reaction is maintained at room temperature under an inert atmosphere until the reaction is substantially complete as evidenced by, for example, thin layer chromatograpy. At which time, an O-demethylation reagent (e.g. boron tribromide, aluminum trichloride, or lithium diphenylphosphine), or preferably a stoichiometric excess thereof, is added to the reaction mixture which is then maintained under conditions (e.g. room temperature) wherein the methoxy group of ibogaine has been converted to the hydroxyl group of noribogaine.

The hydroxyl group generated above is then employed as a complementary functionality for attachment of a solid support. In particular, an excess of chloroformate bound to a solid support is combined with N--CBZ-noribogaine under conventional conditions wherein a cleavable carbonate bond is formed. Chloroformate bound to a solid support can be prepared from a hydroxy-bearing polymer support (e.g. hydroxymethyl) polystyrene or polymer-bound benzyl alcohol, both commercially available from Sigma-Aldrich.RTM.) and carbonyl dichloride. As CBZ-ibogaine does not readily react under these O-demethylation conditions, it will remain in the solution phase of the reaction mixture and can be washed from the reaction mixture by conventional techniques including placing the solid support into a column and passing excess solvent through the column.

In one particular example, 1 kg of solid support containing CBZ-noribogaine is loaded onto a column. The stopper of the column is partially opened so that a flow rate through the column of 0.5 liters per hour is maintained. Methylene chloride is continuously fed to the top of the column and recovered at the base of the column. The recovered methylene chloride is stripped to provide residual CBZ-ibogaine. The process is continued until the effluent from the column no longer contains CBZ-ibogaine. At which time, a portion of the solid support is loaded into a hydrogenation vessel together with methanol and a catalytic amount of palladium on carbon. Hydrogenation is continued under elevated pressure for approximately 5 hours. The reaction is then stopped and the methanol recovered and stripped to provide for noribogaine. Additional purification of noribogaine can be achieved by HPLC as desired.

* * * * *

References


uspto.report is an independent third-party trademark research tool that is not affiliated, endorsed, or sponsored by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) or any other governmental organization. The information provided by uspto.report is based on publicly available data at the time of writing and is intended for informational purposes only.

While we strive to provide accurate and up-to-date information, we do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information displayed on this site. The use of this site is at your own risk. Any reliance you place on such information is therefore strictly at your own risk.

All official trademark data, including owner information, should be verified by visiting the official USPTO website at www.uspto.gov. This site is not intended to replace professional legal advice and should not be used as a substitute for consulting with a legal professional who is knowledgeable about trademark law.

© 2024 USPTO.report | Privacy Policy | Resources | RSS Feed of Trademarks | Trademark Filings Twitter Feed